• Reviews around drive (1.10 of 5)

    Apple iPod Photo 60 GB White M9830LL/A (4th Generation) (Discontinued by Manufacturer)

    • Pros:- THX, DOLBY DIGITAL quality music centre that fits in your palm.- Cosmos sized tiny hard drive.- Design and Clickwheel.- Apple supportCons:- Mains Power Adaptor Costs extra.- Tracks pause between each other.- MP3 files must be
    • I've used the iPod 60GB as a travel hard drive that I use to store digital images.
    • One last thing, you can also use your iPod as an external hard drive to copy and transfer any files you want from one computer to another, and it's drive is big enough for anyone
    • I-Pod - NOPE - - -Just make sure when using I-Tunes that you create a library and back everything up on a hard drive or you will be as frustrated as I am.
    • He has been sent to "email support" but reformatting the hard drive and reinstalling the operating system hasn't helped, so we don't expect much good from that
    • It's an excellent mp3 hard drive based player, the color display is so good and photos look great.
    • All hard drive based devices of any kind - iPods included - have limited G-force tolerance.
    • and it plays solitaire (no - the black 10 on the red jack!).It's also easy to use, the battery life is about what they say it is and it has a monster hard drive
    • You gotta be kidding me!"This little player has as big a hard drive as my computer
    • Apparently the hard drive went bad.
    • But it does have a 60 gig hard drive
    • 3 months after purchase, the hard drive failed and the unit had to be replaced, thankfully it was still under warranty
    • Overall, I would say that it is a good player, but as with anything that has a hard drive, it's rather delicate.
    • You load the MP3 files into the Library of the iTunes software and see if you have the lists alright before finally dumping the chosen library selections onto the iPod's hard drive and taking your whole music collection for a walk on your hip
    • The 40GB click wheel iPod I bought for my husband for Christmas last year died (hard drive fried) 360 days after he opened the box but one year and 3 weeks past when I bought it.
    • But the nano uses flash memory, where the regular ipods use small hard drives.
    • It's a tough environment for a hard drive.
    • The hard drive quit working and just makes little clicking sounds
    • Ambitious folks can buy cheap replacement hard drives on the open market and fix/upgrade their iPods.
    • Laptops have shorter warranty periods than desktops because rapidly spinning hard drives don't tolerate motion well.
    • I advise you burn your songs to a secondary hard drive
    • In theory it would be a great product, except that my first iPod of this model had its hard drive go bad only a few months after I got it.
    • I ripped all my CDs, converted to AAC and deleted the MP3s to save space on my hard drive.
    • Luckily again, I used a company that stored all my songs on a hard drive and it can be reloaded again for the second time, more expense.
    • I took it back to best buy and they replaced the hard drive under my warranty for free and mailed it back to me in about a week.
    • I have really enjoyed my I pod until I started to get errors in January 2006